Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Apr 1967, p. 3

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IN re 13 y- or te of ye Ee. t- A - worn by girl exemplify the These are some of the _ tion. faces of people gathered in men New York's Central. Park Saturday at the start of a atti _ massive Peace _demonstra- ons' PEACE IS THEIR MOTIVE -- Odd headgear of the marched from the park to the United Nations to stage a rally demanding the end to the fighting in Vietnam. (AP _Wirephoto) -- and painted glasses re of many of the dem- trators. They 1 a ter Four Esca At Govern ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)--~ Among) than pees In Line- Up ors Open House 4,000 Georgians gathered to ordering the "most thorough in- the throngs of well - dressed | greet the governor at the man-|vestigation ever conducted by Lester | sion. Bu Georgians at Governor Maddox's first open house Sun-} day were four shabbily dressed | Negroes escaped prisoners with a story to tell the governor. The four said they sawed shak were unheeded. Maddox, busily visitors, mumbled plea of Mrs. ithe department of corrections.' "They had planned two weeks ago to escape. They wanted to surrender to me, They sawed through bars and walked to Jackson from Wilkinson County. t the prisoners' first pleas ing hands and chatting with missed the rapidly Albert through bars at a. Wilkinson|Hill, mother of one of the pris-|I'm convinced there's consider- County public works camp at/oners, able truth to this. midnight Saturday night and) "They're prisoners, they! «These men said they had walked all night to complain|walked all night," Mrs. Hallitried everything else. They had personally to the governor about|said. But the governor already prison treatment. They told Maddox of threats on their lives, of being put in solitary confinement for com- \ plaining and of going six to 'eight days with only one meal. Clad in faded sports shirts and ill-fitting overalls, with 'pri- son garb underneath, the Ne- groes waited in a line of more PLE with had turned to greet other guests. Mrs. thought she'd heard the word 'prisoner' state patrolman to check. He did and called the governor. After talking about 20 minutes a press conference later he was 1 A OVERHEARD Maddox, come." "We wanted to get better con- ditions," said Booker Gary, 20, serving a six-year sentence for robbery. The other three prisoners are) MacArthur Davis, 26, serving a Renee for armed robbery; May, 24, burglary; and} however, and asked a nearby the men, Maddox said at fare Lewis Jackson, 22, as- | KINGSTON MA Y INSTALL BAR «| Case Opens Tn Berlin BERLIN (Reuters)--A man charged with kidnapping four- jyear - old Audrey Klewer of Montreal from her grandfa- ther's home here apparently took the girl as an afterthought, ithe prosecution said at the start 5 jof his trial today. Prosecutor Alfred Atzrott, -|who read the charges of kidnap- ping, blackmail, attempted) the home of Erich Klewer, the girl's grandfather, Aug. 22 with the intention of stealing. However, . Atzrott said Hen- schel was apparently taken by) surprise at the arrival oe al visit by Audrey and her moth Regina Klewer, 28, a Montreal secretary. The prosecutor said Henschel waited until dark, then bound and chloroformed the mother, stole a ring from her finger, and then took Audrey to his {mother's apartment. FLED TO NORWAY Later he took Audrey to a 'way where he was arrested Sept. 11 after an international |police search. Officials said Henschel tried laboratory rats and mice, to commit suicide in prison by| \hanging himself from a window bar, but the makeshift bed-sheet rope snapped. his mother, Anni Henschel, 51, blackmail, theft robbery and) leaving a helpless person, said Juergen Henschel, 22, entered Accused of helping him were '. Rowdies Keep Police Busy sault and battery. In Cleveland's Negro Area Wilm Distr CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -- Young rowdies put extra police to work Sunday night in Cleve- land's east side Negro area Favoritism er Kutina of the with a rash of rock-throwing,|slum Hough area and led to window smashing and looting}four that lasted about three hours./erty damage, much of it from There were at least 20 arrests. |fire-bombs. English - Canadians accept the! ; }- "There were no injuries and no fire-bombings,"' said Lieut. Liu's Home arres other: turba all 20 with f |by a way false TOKYO (AP)--The home 0 China's President Liu Shao-chi, chief rival of Communist party Chairman Mao Tse-tung, is un- signed to the home of Liu and th his wife in He Chung Nan Ai i Park, where the state govern- ipatrol ment is located. yond Other Japanese reports said al time The book, The Story of Ou|were Yang-hai, had sold more than 1,000,000 copies since it was pub-ling st lished Jast December, the Jap- anese account said. Peking's| rifles official news media had heaped|, he praise on it and its unnamed) areas author was said to have been received by Foreign Minister Chen Yi. the a But wall posters in the Chi-) miles. Kutina joining districts Under Guard "i-inr, 2 eros STARTED AT THE FAIR situation under sufficient control to dismiss 26 night-shift Helmeted police, carrying |- crowds dispersed and blocked off traffic from trouble. spots in French-Canadian reality and the two races try to find solutions inspired by justice for the prob- lems facing them, federal Man- power Minister Jean Marchand said Sunday. Mr. Marchand also told: a meeting of the federal Liberal organization in Richmond con-| stituency that French-Canadians| are descriminated against in the army and in the civil service.! "The royal commission on bi- lingualism and_ biculturalism said there were 18 ts in his district and ad- reported two Ss as a. result of the dis- nces. Police said nearly arrests were in connection | looting by young Negro| operating in small groups. injury not reported to thrown bottle while on his to one of a number of alarms. "The French-Canadian is at a real disadvantage in comparison with the English-Canadian. This is revealed in positions occupied) by federal government bodies men who were held be- their midnight quitting for a little more than an best-selling novel about a Com- hour, and in the army, where English-} munist soldier who sacrifices his} Apout 40 stores were damaged |Canadians are clearly favored. | life to save his comrades from/py yandals, police said. j a railway disaster has been de-| "two young men were nabbed) « nounced as counter-revolution-| carrying hacitiine Gul or a "tt is also a cruel fact that! ary. store. Also hard hit by looters English-Canadians are.more at a pawn shop, an optical} home anywhere in Canada than company and a discount cloth-|French-Canadians are in Que-| ore. | bec." | jhis brother Joachim, 18, and 'Kill 25 On Weekend EN ee By THE CANADIAN PRESS | There were eight road deaths| Park, Kidnapping Accidents In Traffic 11 miles north of Orillia THE OSHAWA islet pronanys Ape 17, 1967 3 "IN ITS MEMORIAL ARENA Bermudans Segregated (CP) --Women as club- minded as Canadian women, an} executive representative of Pilot! Cities Desperately Seek New Tax Revenue TORONTO (CP)--In a time broke and Sturgeon Falls de- without giant increases, Gana- retary of the London Board of face an average $40 increase of spiralling taxes, at least one cided that the easiest way was noque, in the Thousand Islands Education, said and the local council is think- municipal government is ques- to avoid what they could not area, has the average man "We've had to curtail our ing of asking developers to pro- tioning the theory that the man afford--the former was to. fire paying only $8 more this year, capital building. There's' no vide school. sites ep : ay ayy who owns the property should one of 19 policemen and the Suburban comm unilies re- money in the budget for acquir- costs of sc hool ctin atfuetion be- pay for the sidewalks, teacher latter to do without 13. of 85 ceive the heaviest punch from ing new schoo] sites, something fore development permits é salaries and the fire hydrants. high school teachers' for the the taxman. These are the we should do a year before we issued. : is In Kingston, offjcials say the coming year. areas to where ex-urbanites build, and I know we're going Municipal councillors find the municipalities' tax spiral will The tax increase ranges from have often fled to avoid high to have to go out and buy one," ever growing demahds of not end until more aid to local $4 in Niagara Falls to $90 in inner-city housing prices and he said : school boards a double hazard school boards and _ councils Bay Ridges TH the fringe of taxes Mr. Rockey spoke of general since the boards cannot gg comes from the provincial gov- Metropolitan Toronto. me * : economies all round. He said s Inless ipalite ernment. RAISE ASSESSMENT SCHOOL COSTS SOAR that the board is limiting plant att s Pan gh cers Bee In an attempt to ease taxa- The "average" house in Met- The climb in school costs is maintenance, delaying the buy- demand. to the Ontario M nic tion pressure, Kingston Mayor ropolitan Toronto. with three or at the root of the tax increases ing of heavy instruction equip- pal Board, it must ¢g vn tna Robert Fray has set a commit- four bedrooms and an assess- and many communities, like ment and more data-processing ever money the achoet tr Mle : tee of aldermen to study means ment of $5,000 will have a levy Pembroke and Sturgeon 'Falls, equipment. ask id : ere other than property taxes to of about $50 more than last are pinching school budgets 3 on en - raise money. year. just to make municipal taxes WANT PROVINCIAL AID of gious pe vasa ek Among the ideas came sug- In other Ontario cities and bearable. Chatham's Mayor Garnet broke both ran ais re bl ae gestions to install a bar in towns the increase this year Property taxes supply most Kird says the establishment of cutting the budget Richie: ad Kingston's Memorial Arena and will be about: Hamilton, $20; of the money the town and a provincial-municipal formula school. teachers. thredine ac to ask the province to run a London, $45; Kingston, $60; school governments depend on, in which the provincial govern- resign in Sturgeon Falls rh = sweepstakes. Auto taxes, mu- Brantford, $50; Oshawa, $40; Despite an increase of about ment pays for education and it moved. io "Podiee t athe nicipal sales taxes and a pil Ottawa $37 and $32 for Cha- 4.5 mills in London, Ont., school welfare would let municipal staff and the attor ie al sa tax were mentioned as possible tham. taxes, the city is having prob- property taxes pay for property threatened to ave Bootes new tax bases. Some smaller communities lems services : Police into Pembr ee ce In Northern Ontario, Pem- have managed -- to scrape by Harry Rockey, executive sec- Toronto Township residents GhaKGe then tay rave i? ae ;did not provide at least 19 po- lice officers. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry wy longer be annoyed or feel ill-at- eas si teeth F, AST FETH, an improv ed alka- line (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on your plates holds them firmer so they feel more comforfable. Avoid embar- Traffic 'accidents resulted in'in Quebec, three in each of George Murray Gillam, 29,|International said Sunday at the rassment caused by loose plates. Get 25 of 30 accidental deaths across berta and Saskatchewan and King, Ont., drowned when his annual convention of the Asso-| FASTEETH at any drug counter Canada during the weekend Jone in Nova Scotia. car plunged into the Holland Ciation's District 17. A Canadian Press survey! British Columbia,. Manitoba,;canal near his home, 10 miles! Mrs. Arthur Cann of Pem RRR: "ag Sane 6 aa a tha ihe phen ytrel ers ips ip? of Mend ; brooke, Bermuda, said in an in-! unday, Joca i s0/Island an undland were} Alfonsas Deausa, 76, in a fire teryiew that possible be showed three persons were fatality-free. that destroyed his home at... eee ee y q é a ship in the association of busi- | one 0 drowned, one died in a fire and| The survey does not include| Schomberg, 25 miles northwest one in a fall. Five provinces reported no accidental deaths. Three of the 10 traffic fatal- ities in Ontario resulted from car - motorcycle collisions. The! province also had three drown- ings, one man killed in a fire} and a boy killed in a fall from) a second- Storey window. natural or industrial deaths, known suicides or slayings. | The Ontario dead: SATURDAY Robert Archibald, 17, Port Credit, Ont., and Marydale Cot- ton, 14, Geneva Park, Ont., in ia car-train collision near Floral Information Transmitted 'One Animal To Another CHICAGO (AP) -- Evidencefability of mice to escape from | Gary Luxford, 19, both of Wind-|McLeigh was elected treasurer. when the motorcycle|Mary that specific information can be/a maze. transmitted from one animal to even been put in a hole for|deserted garden shed where he\another by means of brain ex- complaining. I'm glad they did'jeft her, before fleeing to Nor-|tract injections was reported by two separate research groups} 'today. The experiments were with} but University college of medicine, Houston, Tex., | some of the Dr. Georges Ungar of Baylor said the findings |probably can be extended to/ But in later tests, more than more complex} mental processes" in humans. lad Extracts prepared from of Toronto. ness women is limited by. the Invest! Paul Coulson, 4, when he fellfact that life in Bermuda is | from a second-story window of segregated. e i his parents' Toronto apartment.) She sald there 1s nothing In| arn : , bose rules of the organization to SUNDAY . : NDA r Negroes and added that dur- \ Mrs, Nancy Diane Hender-| ing the last year a Negro doctor | son, 24, Oshawa, in a two-cat/and a Negro lawyer joined| 4 collision on Highway 2 about 10 |men's service clubs on the is- |miles east of Oshawa. Nan per annum when |group of rats and mice was| given extracts from the brains| of untrained laboratory animals. chose the lighted escape route. three-quarters of the mice who, received brain lfriend Petur Uloth, 19, who was|their results at the annual meet-|lighted or shock - free esca charged with giving Henschelling of the Federation of Amer-|route, The other mice followed|months, drowned when he fell the same escape routes they|into a creek near his home at the chloroform drey's mother. Four days were planned for! the trial. 2 Alleged j }pected April 27. ict where the disturbances | ege | Audrey and her mother ar- occurred, In that same district} last July rioting started in the| jrived here Aug. 22, and then |hand and feet and drugged, a shed. the same|Gerald WINDSOR, Que. (CP) -- Can-| Inight Audrey was kidnapped, os eo of ac ire Queens 'nn_jada is still workable with its|held four days against a 35,000-/College, City University of New deaths and $500,000 prop- [two major races but only if|mark ($8,400)) ransom demand, York, the other research team, left deserted, bound|described their results as in'Statistically significant." used on Au-|ican Societies for Experimental | Biology. Ungar said the probability of The verdict was ex-|his findings being due to chance |' were "'less than 1 in 1,000." Dr. Walter B. Essman and Dr. M. Lehrer of the de- "very Both experiments tested the Federal Laxity Charged On Juvenile Delinquency GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)| he federal government was criticized Sunday for not taking quick action on a 1965 report |prevention \stantial | quency has urged that sub- federal aid be given the provinces for research and/| of juvenile delin-' quency. It noted that the num-! |ber of children' judged delin-| a Queen's| jquent in Canada increased 27) law professor who|per cent between 1957 and 1961, | served as secretary to a federal) |while the total population in- der ard, apparently by Mao hopes to conclude in favor of ' : A sonenere, a Jicen corres- Ped acy watt at - fight the equality of the two founding on Jereni delinquency in Can-| pondent reported Sunday from/near a carnival on Superior |T@¢es, but this equality is only)" Ronald R. Price Peking. __lAvenue. It spread to the main|in theory," he told the meetiPs University ( The newspaper Asahi said/thoroughfare to the east, Eu-|i" this community, 80 miles east about 10 'activists' are as-|cliqd Avenue, before police got|/0f Montreal. committee that spent years studying ways to deal with juvenile delinquency, said the United States has moved; more rapidly in this field than | has Canada. Prof. Price spoke to about 100) judges, lawyers, social workers | land social scientists at a con- ference called to urge the goy- ernment to take action on the 100 recommendations contained in the report, Juvenile Delin- quency in Canada. The report on juvenile delin- | and for a time aided by licopter that swept dark with its searchlights, kept | City Of 1967 BUS rea of about two square nese capital now have charged Oshawa INESS TAX that the book "'insults the Peo-| ple's Liberation Army. and dis- | torts the class struggle. . . ." Japanese reports said the novel also was denounced for adher- | ing to principles of Liu's trea- tise, How to be a Good Commu- | nist, which has come under fire | Ajex LOWEST EXCURSION FARES To Britain and Europe HOWARD TRAVEL BUREAU LTD. Shopping Plaza 942-6690 PAYABLE IN BEFORE DUE from Maoist elements. = HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR Fast Action HOUSE SALES! | Call « Member of the OSHAWA ond DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD and List Photo als MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE = --_ FREE Rates, Repair Specialists. Service Estimates, Reasonable Commissioner. PENALTY OF 1% DUE APRIL 28th ON FIRST DAY OF DEFAULT and on the tives creased by 9.5 per cent. WRITING ALL LIFE John Philip Sousa wrote 140 | marches and 10 operas. chose before injections from un- trained animals. "Over 400 animals have now been tested . . .'and over-all results indicate a very high probability that some specific learned information has heen transferred from the trained! donors to the recipients," Ungar said. Ungar theorized that nerve jcells in the brain are labelled by a specific chemical molecule and that when the cells of two different channels are activated simultaneously "they exchange their chemical labels and |thereby establish a new connec- jtion between the two channels." HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 /EARS TROUD' 54 SIMCOE | 54 SIMCOE NORTH | Tuesday and Wednesday Specials LEAN, SHANK FULL ON OR DATE ABOVE Business Tax Bills were mailed on or before April 13th IF YOU BUSINESS TAX BILL PLEASE TELEPHONE THE TAX DEPARTMENT AT ONCE, SRY ERLE NAT AREER ITO IF BUSINESS IS CLOSED -- NOTIFY IN WRITING AT ONCE giving date closed to the Tox Department AND the Assessment first day of each calender mon continues. BAILIFF and DIVISION COURT th thereafter in which default PROCEEDINGS WITH COSTS Installed Fast Dependable Radio Dis- outstanding efter Due Dote. Civic Administration Bldg. Corner Centre and Athol Sts. Oshawa, Onterio Service Coll 723-1191 are provided in the Assessment Act of Ontario for any amount City Tox Depertment Telephone 725-1153 Locals 209, 210, 228 or 229 1 BEEF STEWING 69: TASTY SKINLESS Wieners ie extracts Both research groups reported|from trained animals chose the onto home. Clarence Taylor, 79, struck by a car while walking jon the street near his home in [Rayo Toronto. Raymond N. Turner, 17, Lane llision in Toronto. in a Robert sor, Ont., Hayden Tor car-motorcycle col- and Sexsmith, 18, the they were riding collided with Ont., Siemens, 18, and brains of trained animals then|a car in Windsor. were injected into untrained) rats or mice, and a_ second} Mrs. Fred Nash of ceca) was installed as lieutenant-gov- ernor of District 17. Mrs. Marvin Elliott of Nia- gara_ Falls, Ont., succeeded) Miss Lilian Beamish of Oshawa | as governor and Mrs. Keith Adams of Niagara Falls, was installed as secretary. Robert Dean Maracle, 16, of |Desoronto, was awarded Roger Holmes, both of Toronto,| ldistrict's $1,500 centennial jand Joyce a two-car collision near the \junction of Highway Christopher Brons, 31, Hamilton,} Josephs, 5.) {scholarship for a Canadian In-! 122 and|dian student. Mr. Maracle plans! Before the injections, slightly the Queen Elizabeth Way at\to enter Lakehead University on more than half of each group) Oakville. an arts course this fall. the | The Peterborough club was for five years by investing in Guaranteed Investment Certificates which are Gueranteed--os to Principal and Interest. Flexible--may be used @ Col- lateral for loans. Redeemable--by Executors in the event of death, Authorized--os Trustee Act In- vestments, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUS) & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 ict He N A Oshawe "$221 23 King a 7 earmanvitie drowned when he fell into a! |presented with the international | lswimming pool near his Tor-| relations award for its work in peipaty supporting a Korean child NIGHTS Clifford Raymond Place, {7|through the Uniterian Service SATURDAYS Committee of Canada and con- tributions to the Canadian Save Brockville. _the Children' Fund vei "wa Ga? ' 4 and The DC-9 Jet is the peppy new addition to the Air Canada fleet. And, take our word for it, a ride on it is nothing to be scoffed at. The DC-9 has everything a great jet should have -- and some! It's quick. It's quiet. It's comfortable. And it's good-looking, For reservations on the DC-9 and information about our Fly Now-Pay Later Plan Family Fare Discounts, Or write to us in Toronto at 130 Bloor Street W. 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